This small charming roundabout between Fisher Halls and Kamine Hall is modified by Lafayette students to control stormwater. Because our campus locates in the Bushkill Creek watershed, stormwater accumulating on the surface of campus combining with pollutants and sediments will run into Bushkill Creek. The creek will thus be polluted and damaged by stormwater. In 2017, students from our school built this area to alleviate this problem. They carefully chose soil and native plants to increase biodiversity and stormwater infiltration. There are five species of flowers in this area and they have different colors. Red, blue, yellow, orange, all these colors complement each other and constitute a vivid canvas. I found it is so ingenious that these flowers not only aesthetically complement each other but also have specific functions. For example, the Green and Gold flowers in the middle of the picture provide low-growing ground cover, while the orange flower in the back called Butterflies Milkweed attracts butterflies and bees.